Tag Archives: higher education

I heard the enemy dinner-call. So I walked to UPenn for a talk on Cultured Meat. Having apprenticed in my dad’s butcher shop, I don’t relate to clinically strained beef. I have natural tastes. True flavors.

If, under siege in the Techno-Apocalypse, I was cannibalized by starving pals? The sorry chef would eulogize. Read more …

Among my favorite “radical centrists” is the British commentator Carl Benjamin, better known as Sargon of Akkad. He’s enjoyable to listen to, not merely for the easy sound of his voice and his superior accent, but for his uncompromising honesty, even when he is wrong.

Back in March of last year, he published a video about the Alt-Right, and his summary was that it was fundamentally an idea space, protected from the policing of progressive gate-keepers.

I suspect that the path which led me to work with Counter-Currents is somewhat different from that of many of the other people who contribute to it. I did not naturally gravitate toward the Right at an early age, as did many of those I know who are active in it. I grew up in suburban New York, and although there were certainly experiences I had there that were to shape my later worldview, I was not conscious of them as such at the time. Read more …

“Abort” is not too strong a word, as the planned Auckland University European Students Association was seemingly obliterated before it got going, unless it has plans to exist in another form or dimension. Read more …

My name is F. C. and I am a man of East Asian extraction currently living and working in the neo-imperialist China, a land of unabashed and unapologetic racial bias and ethnocentrism. I speak and write Japanese, English, and Chinese fluently. I am also a fan, supporter, and contributor of Counter-Currents Read more …

The best decision I ever made was to pursue a Ph.D. in philosophy. I learned about the most important questions, I studied the most profound attempts to answer them, I acquired both the tools and the commitment to pursue the truth, and I became a better—that is, wiser—man in the process. Read more …

Perhaps the most controversial issue of all, indeed even among White Nationalists, is the so-called Jewish question.

1. Race in the Ivy Leagues

The Ivy League universities are no doubt the most important institutions preparing the American ruling elite. Yesterday’s Harvard and Yale graduates are tomorrow’s high-flying bankers, lawyers, politicians, and media executives. Read more …

I often go back to my college town where I did my post-graduate work and peruse the place, taking in the sights. It’s changed a lot. More people and more traffic mostly. Some of my favorite places are gone, while others have managed to hang on. Much of the old downtown is still there, with people meandering around between the boutiques and antique shops. It seems to have also attracted a few tourists now, looking for some memorabilia to take home. Read more …

Since our last update, we have received twelve new donations totaling $1,660. Our total so far is $16,036.50. Our goal is to raise $50,000 by October 31, so we are $33,963.50 away from our goal. Again, I want to thank all of our donors for their generous support.

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The stereotype of White Nationalists is that they are white male “losers” who have no jobs, live with their families, and spend all of their time on the internet. Read more …

John Young, the author of A Springless Autumn, is on the board of directors of European Americans United, a group which defines itself as “an organization dedicated to the preservation and exaltation of classical European values.” He is also a writer for EAU—many of the articles on the EAU website are his, Read more …